Morris Edward Opler
Anthropologist, Award Winner
1907 – 1996
Who was Morris Edward Opler?
Morris Edward Opler, American anthropologist and advocate of Japanese American civil rights, was born in Buffalo, New York. He was the brother of Marvin Opler, an anthropologist and social psychiatrist.
Morris Opler's chief anthropological contribution is in the ethnography of Southern Athabaskan peoples, i.e. the Navajo and Apache, such as the Chiricahua, Mescalero, Lipan, and Jicarilla. His classic work is An Apache Life-Way. He worked with Grenville Goodwin, who was also studying social organization among the Western Apache. After Goodwin's early death, Opler edited a volume of his letters from the field and other papers, published in 1973.
Opler earned his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1933. He taught at Reed College in Portland, Oregon during the 1940s and later taught at Cornell University and the University of Oklahoma.
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- Born
- May 3, 1907
Buffalo - Also known as
- Morris Opler
- Nationality
- United States of America
- Profession
- Education
- PhD, University of Chicago
Anthropology
(1930 - 1933) - Bachelor of Arts, University at Buffalo
Sociology
( - 1929) - Master of Arts, University at Buffalo
Anthropology
( - 1930)
- PhD, University of Chicago
- Lived in
- Buffalo
(1907/05/03 - ) - Norman
(1969 - 1996/05/13) - Manzanar, California
(1943/04 - 1944) - Portland
(1937 - 1938)
- Buffalo
- Died
- May 13, 1996
Norman
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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